|
From www.lonelyplanet.com Hot stuff at Hawai'i Volcanoes National Park
Article by: Conner Gorry, September 2008 Strap on some sturdy shoes - we're gonna go play in the lava (well, sort of).
For 25 years and counting, Kilauea has been
sending hot ribbons of lava into the sea, boiling it on contact, making
black-sand beaches and headlines, burying entire towns and sacred Hawaiian
temples. It's the world's most active volcano and the best geological show on
the planet.
Best of all, you can walk straight up to the molten stuff. Or nearly, anyway: the toxic plume blanketing the shoreline cliffs and unstable new lava land mean you can get only so close and still live to tell your friends about it. But visit Hawai'i Volcanoes National Park (HAVO), where the volcano and its goddess Pele live, and you'll have stories about much more than live lava: hikes through steaming craters and secret lava tubes, petroglyph fields and white-sand beaches. The volcano has been getting a bit frisky lately; check up on the latest on road and site closures before you go. Cocktails above the crater Aside from camping, the only place to stay
in the park is the historic Volcano
House, perched over Kilauea Caldera. You might be better pitching a
tent so you can skip the high-price, low-value rooms, but it's well worth
making a visit to its Uncle George's Lounge for sunset cocktails. You'll be
hard pressed to find a friendlier Big Island bartender. And you'll swoon from
the view.
Cycle the crater rim Life is better experienced on two wheels than four. On a mountain bike you can design a multi-mile loop connecting Crater Rim Trail (paved parts only, say park officials), the fun, almost all downhill Escape Road, and Hilina Pali Rd. This last offers some of the island's most kick-ass Mauna Loa views. Make sure to download maps and the latest safety information before you go. Explore a secret lava tube Even if you like to leave your travel plans loose, plan ahead to secure one of the 12 coveted slots on this weekly tour. In a secret location several miles within the park, the 500-year old tube is reached on a ranger-guided hike; it leaves on Wednesdays at noon. To sign up, call the Kilauea Visitor Center (tel: 808 985 6017) at 7:45am (Hawaii time!) on the Wednesday before you want to do the hike - one week prior is the maximum advance planning they allow. Glyphs a go-go The ancient Hawaiians danced and chanted, surfed and sacrificed. They also drew prolifically, inscribing images of birth, death, sailing and sea creatures onto canvasses of smooth pahoehoe lava. You can see some of them at Hawaii's biggest petroglyph field, near the end of Chain of Craters Dr.
Hike to the lava source
There's nothing quite like trekking up a smoldering, crumbling cinder cone responsible for up to 1 million cubic yards of lava per day. Conditions at Pu' O'o are variable, so again, get the latest before you start out. Old-skool Hula Forget cheesy grass skirts and coconut brassieres. The Na Mea Hawai'i Hula Kahiko series of hula performances on the edge of Kilauea Crater are the real deal. Knees bent to better absorb the earth's energy, chanting like the ancients with each symbolically charged movement, the dancers transport you back in time. Check out performance times online or call 808 967 8222 for information. Snorkel at Halape, sleep at Keauhou This 20-mile, round-trip, back-country trek to coastal campsites will not disappoint. Halape is a series of scalloped white-sand beaches, with good snorkelling at the base of rugged cliffs. Keauhou is one of the Big Island's most savagely beautiful landscapes, combining cliffs, ocean, lava, sand and succulents. The permits you'll need are available at the Kilauea Visitor Center. Read up on back-country hiking and download brochures before you go.
Watching the live lava flow
See what the lava's up to before you contemplate this one. Obviously, lava is more dramatic at night: take water and reliable flashlights, and wear sturdy shoes. Best HAVO day hikes Short on time? No worries, you can still experience some of the best the park has to offer on these day hikes:
Day-hike brochure Trail closures Important information on Observatory Trail to the Mauna Loa summit |